The Damascus Room

العنوان The Damascus Room
تاريخ النشر: 1788
مكان النشر Syria (made) Damascus (made) -
الموضوع Woodwork Architecture
النوع أخرى
اللغة غير محدد
رقمي نعم
مخطوط لا
الأبعاد الفيزيائية Height: 90cm, Width: 21.5cm, Depth: 1.5cm
المكتبة: Victoria and Albert Museum
معرف أصل المكتبة 504B-1883
رقم السجل 504B-1883
موقع المكتبة Middle East Section
التاريخ 1788
ملاحظات The following excerpt is taken from Dorothea Duda. "Painted and lacquered woodwork in Arab houses of Damascus and Aleppo", in Lacquerwork in Asia and Beyond: Colloquies on Art and Archaeology in Asia No. 11, ed. William Watson (London: Percival David Foundation, 1981), pp. 247-9: There existed an old tradition of using lacquer for the final treatment of painted wooden surfaces in the Near East. The lacquer used probably came from the Mediterranean Sandarak cypress (Tetraclinis articulata), a fine scented resin having been exported to Europe by medieval Arab physicians for medical treatment and for burning as incense. More plentifully preserved are the painted and lacquered wooden interiors of the Ottoman period in both Istanbul and in Anatolia, in mosques, private houses and palaces. This style of decoration was transmitted from Istanbul to the whole of the Balkans and to the Maghrib. In Damascus and Aleppo alike, all houses had flat roofs. Also in Damascus the ‘ataba (threshold) room rose above the roofs and received light from up there by rows of windows on all four sides. The houses had two floors, but the main liwans (halls) rose through both floors. So these rooms offered agreeable dimensions, and cooler ventilation in the summer. Marble panelling, relief ornamentation, mosaics, tiles and manifold patterns by incrustations of coloured pastes of plaster gave a serene and gay aspect to these old town houses, especially in Damascus. Again and again, from the 17th to the 19th centuries, European travellers were charmed by the delightful Aleppine and Damascene houses and enthusiastically described them in their reports. The inhabitants of these palaces were the pashas or governors of the Ottoman administration with their families, Syrian landowners, the gentry, and wealthy Muslim, Christian, Jewish and Armenian merchants.
İçerik açıklaması This panel gives the date of 1204 AH equivalent to 1789 AD.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Carved wood and painted; lacquered
Fiziksel açıklama Rectangular shaped panel made of carved wood, painted entirely on one side with a horizontal composition consisting of an Arabic inscription painted in golden relief set against fine painted vegetal sprays in dark green. The inscription is surrounded by a fine red band and a wider geometric border. Dated 1204H. in the bottom left.
عرض في المصدر Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - محرك بحث المخطوطات العثمانية
Victoria and Albert Museum - محرك بحث المخطوطات العثمانية Victoria and Albert Museum

The Damascus Room

تاريخ النشر 1788
مكان النشر Syria (made) Damascus (made) -
الموضوع Woodwork Architecture
النوع أخرى
اللغة غير محدد
رقمي نعم
مخطوط لا
الأبعاد الفيزيائية Height: 90cm, Width: 21.5cm, Depth: 1.5cm
المكتبة Victoria and Albert Museum
معرف أصل المكتبة 504B-1883
رقم السجل 504B-1883
موقع المكتبة Middle East Section
التاريخ 1788
ملاحظات The following excerpt is taken from Dorothea Duda. "Painted and lacquered woodwork in Arab houses of Damascus and Aleppo", in Lacquerwork in Asia and Beyond: Colloquies on Art and Archaeology in Asia No. 11, ed. William Watson (London: Percival David Foundation, 1981), pp. 247-9: There existed an old tradition of using lacquer for the final treatment of painted wooden surfaces in the Near East. The lacquer used probably came from the Mediterranean Sandarak cypress (Tetraclinis articulata), a fine scented resin having been exported to Europe by medieval Arab physicians for medical treatment and for burning as incense. More plentifully preserved are the painted and lacquered wooden interiors of the Ottoman period in both Istanbul and in Anatolia, in mosques, private houses and palaces. This style of decoration was transmitted from Istanbul to the whole of the Balkans and to the Maghrib. In Damascus and Aleppo alike, all houses had flat roofs. Also in Damascus the ‘ataba (threshold) room rose above the roofs and received light from up there by rows of windows on all four sides. The houses had two floors, but the main liwans (halls) rose through both floors. So these rooms offered agreeable dimensions, and cooler ventilation in the summer. Marble panelling, relief ornamentation, mosaics, tiles and manifold patterns by incrustations of coloured pastes of plaster gave a serene and gay aspect to these old town houses, especially in Damascus. Again and again, from the 17th to the 19th centuries, European travellers were charmed by the delightful Aleppine and Damascene houses and enthusiastically described them in their reports. The inhabitants of these palaces were the pashas or governors of the Ottoman administration with their families, Syrian landowners, the gentry, and wealthy Muslim, Christian, Jewish and Armenian merchants.
İçerik açıklaması This panel gives the date of 1204 AH equivalent to 1789 AD.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Carved wood and painted; lacquered
Fiziksel açıklama Rectangular shaped panel made of carved wood, painted entirely on one side with a horizontal composition consisting of an Arabic inscription painted in golden relief set against fine painted vegetal sprays in dark green. The inscription is surrounded by a fine red band and a wider geometric border. Dated 1204H. in the bottom left.
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